Bodybuilding Information - A Look at Steroids. november 2007 24hrfitness. December 4, 2008 <http://www.24hrfitness.co.uk/bodybuilding/steroids.html>.

What are steroids?
  • Steroids are natural or synthetic compounds that help to regulate certain body functions.
  • There are two types of steroids used for body enhancement, anabolic that helps in building muscles and androgenic which makes the users more masculine by emphasizing masculine traits such as a deeper voice and growth of body hair.
  • There are over one hundred fifty different types of anabolic steroids.
  • The most common type of steroids that we hear about frequently is anabolic steroids used by athletes to improve their performance in sports.
  • These types of steroids are called by many different names, among them juice and roids




NIDA InfoFacts: Steroids (Anabolic-Androgenic). December 2, 2008 National Institutes of Health (NIH). 19 Nov. 2008 <http://www.nida.nih.gov/Infofacts/Steroids.html


  1. AAS are anabolic-androgenic steroids
  2. AAS are manufactured to relate to testosterone
  3. Anabolic refers to muscle-building
  4. Androgenic refers to increased male sexual characteristics
  5. Steroids are the class of drugs
  6. Steroids can be used legally for delayed puberty
  7. Steroids can also be used for other diseases that result in loss of lean muscle mass
  8. Anyone can abuse AAS to increase physical appearence and performance
  9. AAS are taken orally or injected
  10. Steroids are taken in cycles of weeks or months
  11. Users often combine several different types of steroids, a practice referred to as stacking
  12. AAS in the brain can affect gene expression
  13. AAS can effect mood and behavior
  14. Many users are feeling good about themselves while on steroids, but extreme mood swings also occur, including symptoms that lead to violence
  15. AAS can cause depression which could lead to suicide
  16. Steroid users may also encounter other drugs like heroin
  17. Health problems for men taking AAS are shrinking of the testicles, reduced sperm count, infertility, baldness, development of breasts, increased risk for prostate cancer
  18. Health problems for women taking AAS are growth of facial hair, male-pattern baldness, changes in or cessation of the menstrual cycle, enlargement of the clitoris, deepened voice
  19. Health problems for adolescents taking AAS are stunted growth due to premature skeletal maturation and accelerated puberty changes; adolescents risk not reaching their expected height if they take AAS before the typical adolescent growth spurt
  20. People taking AAS have more of a chance of getting AIDS or hepititis
  21. There has been very little research on treatment for AAS abuse
  22. Current knowledge derives largely from the experiences of a small number of physicians who have worked with patients undergoing steroid withdrawal
  23. Therapy seems to work with most AAS abusers
  24. Medication can be used sometimes to restore hormone level ----


Anabolic steroids. December 9, 2008 ESPN. 20 Nov. 2008 http://espn.go.com/special/s/drugsandsports/steroids.html.
  1. Use of AAS is illegal and banned by most major sports organizations
  2. Some athletes still take them, believing that these substances provide a competitive advantage
  3. Use of anabolic steroids are escalating
  4. The hormone's anabolic effect helps the body retain dietary protein, which aids in the development of muscles
  5. The anabolic property of steroids lures athletes
  6. Those that are injected are broken down into additional categories, very long-lasting and those that last a shorter time
  7. Oral form of AAS were discovered to be especially worrisome for the liver
  8. Anabolic steroids are designed to mimic the bodybuilding traits of testosterone
  9. Females also produce testosterone but in minute amounts
  10. Athletes may use up to hundreds of milligrams a day
  11. Anabolic steroids do not improve agility, skill or cardiovascular capacity
  12. Their dangers may not be manifest for years
  13. Long after you give AAS up you may develop side effects
  14. Although AAS are derived from a male sex hormone, men who take them may actually experience a "feminization" effect
  15. On the other hand, women often experience a "masculinization" effect from AAS
  16. Continued use of anabolic steroids would lead to
    1. Acne
    2. Bloated appearance
    3. Rapid weight gain
    4. Clotting disorders
    5. Liver damage
    6. Premature heart attacks and strokes
    7. Elevated cholesterol levels
    8. Weakened tendons

  1. Steroids close the growth centers in a kid's bones
  2. Once these growth plates are closed, they cannot reopen so adolescents may end up shorter than they should be
  3. Users can be depressed one minute and be envulnerable the next
  4. The note above is commonly known as roid rage
  5. Steroids are like a drug, when you stop taking them you get sick then when you go back to them you feel good again ---- ----

Bodybuilding Information - A Look at Steroids. november 2007 24hrfitness. December 4, 2008 http://www.24hrfitness.co.uk/bodybuilding/steroids.html

  • Steroids are used in low dosages to treat some types of illnesses such as asthma, arthritis and brain injuries and some types of breast cancer.
  • The type of steroids used to treat these conditions are corticosteroids, these types do not result in bigger muscles.
  • Anabolic steroids which are used for muscle building and performance boosting can also be used for treating some medical conditions such as delayed puberty and anemia.
  • Steroids, because of their possible side effects, should not be taken lightly. While they may be potentially beneficial, they should not be used illegally.



Anthony , Roberts. Steroids in Sports. Steroid.com. December 9, 2008 http://www.steroid.com/steroids-in-sports.php.


  1. Story of steroid use in sports began just before the World Weightlifting Championships of 1954, the Soviet Union confessed about taking testosterone injections
  2. Some unconfirmed sources say Germany used AAS in 1936 at the Berlin olympics
  3. In the original olympics athletes were known taking herbs to increase anabolic performance
  4. People tried anything to increase performance back in the day, because the olympics were all they lived for
  5. In 1956 Dr. Ziegler and the Ciba pharmaceutical company made a steroid called "Methandrostenolone" or Dianabol
  6. "Methandrostenolone" or dianabol was the first anabolic steroid that wasn´t testosterone
  7. Since 1956 many steroids have been developed, each one with their own set of characteristics
  8. By the late 1960´s the East Germans had also entered the fray and were giving steroids to their athletes as part of a state sponsored program to bolster national pride by winning Olympic Gold Medals
  9. Dianabol was quickly made available to anyone looking for an extra edge
  10. Steroids helped many bodybuilders, weightlifters, football players, and Olympic athletes train harder, longer, and more efficiently
  11. Steroids enhanced protein synthesis and allowed new muscle to be built at a rate that was much more rapid than would otherwise be possible. And that increased muscle power and strength translated into financial rewards for the athletes who were taking them
  12. If you were an athlete looking to take your career farther, Dianabol could be a part of your diet
  13. Athletes all over the world wanted to know where to get them and how to use them
  14. In 1968 there was an official complaint about steroids made by the World Health Organization
  15. Steroids were being over produced by the major pharmaceutical firms, and were subsequently shipped to certain third world countries, where doctors would receive a kickback for prescribing large amounts of them
  16. Kenya and Jamaica were where this was happening, and they did well at the olympics that year (surprisingly)
  17. At this time, there were no documented reports of athletes using steroids in sports other than Olympic competition
  18. At this time, a ban on Anabolic steroids was issued by the International Olympic Council
  19. By the 1990's AAS have been found in high school level sports
  20. Steroids were tought in high school in the mid 80's
  21. The MLB was the last major sports league to issue a drug policy ban
  22. This all started with a bottle of a nutritional supplement seen in Mark McGwire´s locker
  23. At this time, McGwire was en route to breaking a home-run record that had been standing for decades
  24. A estimated roughly fifty percent of the players in the league were using them also
  25. Jose Canseco, in a book published during the height of the steroids in baseball media coverage, estimated that 85% of all players in MLB used steroids, and also admitted using them
  26. Steroid policy in football and the NFL as we know it began in 1987
  27. With regards to football, it would seem that current educational efforts are not working well
  28. The most famous story of steroid use in the NFL is that of Lyle Alzado
  29. Seven years after having a successful career in the NFL, in 1992, Alzado died from brain lymphoma
  30. He was 43 that year, but in the years preceding it, Alzado became an often used symbol of the dangers of steroid abuse
  31. There is absolutely no medical link between steroids and brain lymphoma, and there is absolutely no reason for Alzado to believe his condition was related to steroid use
  32. Bill Romanowski wrote a book, in which he admits that Victor Conte introduced him to several performance enhancing compounds, notably anabolic steroids
  33. Bill Romanowski was a great linebacker
  34. As long as there is prestige and money to be earned from playing football, there will be steroids in it
  35. Ben Johnson broke the world sprinting record in the 1988 Seoul Olympic Games, he tested positive for Winstrol (Stanozolol)
  36. Ben Johnson denies this because he says he used it 28 days before the race, which you are allowed to do
  37. So the test remains very suspect, although Ben Johnson was suspended and stripped of his Olympic Gold medal. He probably suffered the worst fate of all the people who have been caught using steroids either at the Olympics or otherwise
  38. Although some athletes still compete for the love of the game, prestige often accompanies success. And today, just as two millennia ago, athletes often find the opportunity to compete for both prestige as well as money
  39. And that is why they sought out performance enhancers in the ancient Olympic Games, and that´s why athletes are using steroids in sports today ----

Steroids. 2005 Muscle News. December 10, 2008 <http://www.musclenet.com/steroid.htm>.

  • "Anabolic steroids" is the familiar name for synthetic substances related to the male sex hormones
  • They promote the growth of skeletal muscle and the development of male sexual characteristics
  • lots of side effects
  • the proper term for these compounds is "anabolic-androgenic" steroids.


  • Anabolic steroids were developed in the late 1930s primarily to treat hypogonadism,
  • The primary medical uses of these compounds are to treat delayed puberty, some types of impotence, and wasting of the body caused by HIV infection or other diseases.
  • During the 1930s, scientists discovered that anabolic steroids could facilitate the growth of skeletal muscle in laboratory animals
  • studies led to the use of the compounds first by bodybuilders and weightlifters and then by athletes in other sports.
  • Steroid abuse has become so widespread in athletics that it affects the outcome of sports contests.

  • More than 100 different anabolic steroids have been developed
  • all of them require a prescription to be used legally in the United States.
  • Most steroids that are used illegally are smuggled in from other countries, illegally diverted from U.S. pharmacies, or synthesized in clandestine laboratories.



Rebecca, Shore. How we got here. March 11, 2008 Sports illustrated. December 7, 2008 <http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2008/magazine/03/11/steroid.timeline/index.html>.


  1. 1886 Twenty-four-year-old Welsh cyclist Arthur Linton dies during a race from Bordeaux to Paris; he is believed to have taken trimethyl, a stimulant
  2. 1889 French physician Charles-Édouard Brown-Séquard, 72, extracts testicular fluid from dogs and guinea pigs and injects it into himself. He claims to feel years younger with renewed energy
  3. 1935 German scientists develop anabolic steroids as a way to treat hypogonadism -- testosterone deficiency. Butenandt would later win the Nobel Prize for his cumulative findings in sex hormones
  4. 1940-45 Nazis test anabolic steroids on prisoners, Gestapos and Hitler himself. Testosterone and its analogs are used by German soldiers to promote aggressiveness and physical strength. Hitler's mental state toward the end of his life exhibits characteristics that some scientists associate with heavy steroid use
  5. 1945-47 Anabolic steroids are used to help reverse the wasting effects of war and concentration-camp imprisonment
  6. 1954 As the U.S.S.R. begins to dominate the sport of powerlifting, a Soviet team doctor allegedly reveals his team's use of testosterone injections to U.S. weightlifting doctor John Ziegler
  7. 1958 Ziegler's anabolic steroid -- methandrostenolone -- is released by Ciba Pharmaceuticals under the name Dianabol
  8. 1960 Sports Illustrated publishes Our Drug-Happy Athletes by George Walsh, exposing the use of amphetamines ("pep pills"), tranquilizers, cocaine and other drugs in elite sports
  9. 1969 Sports Illustrated produces a three-part investigation about performance-enhancing drugs in sports
  10. 1975 The International Olympic Committee adds anabolic steroids to its list of banned substances
  11. 1983 The governing body of the Pan Am Games in Caracas strips Chicago weightlifter Jeff Michels of three gold medals, and three other Latin American weightlifters of theirs, when they test positive for anabolic steroids
  12. 1988 The high-profile rivalry between sprinters Carl Lewis and Ben Johnson comes to a head when Johnson posts a record-smashing time of 9.79 seconds. Johnson's time is deleted from record books and his gold medal stripped after the anabolic steroid Stanozol is detected in his urine sample
  13. 1991 Twenty former East German coaches admit to administering anabolic steroids to some of their swimmers
  14. 1990 The Anabolic Steroids Control Act is introduced by Congress. for which trafficking is now a felony, not a misdemeanor
  15. 992 NFL defensive end Lyle Alzado dies of brain cancer on May 14. The 43-year-old two-time All-Pro believed his disease was the result of more than two decades of steroid and HGH
  16. 1999 The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), an independent agency, is formed through the IOC
  17. 2000 Urinalysis tests are improved to detect EPO, but blood doping -- the injection of one's own red blood cells -- remains undetectable. Potential risks of blood doping include blood clots, strokes and thromboses
  18. 2005 Former NFL linebacker Bill Romanowski admits to using steroids obtained through Conte----

Steroid Pros and Cons. 2005 Muscle News. December 11, 2008 <http://www.musclenet.com/steroid.htm>.
Commonly Reported Positive Effects:
  • Increased leanness / muscle definition
  • Increased muscle mass / weight
  • Increased strength
  • Increased effectiveness of training
  • Improved recovery rate
  • Euphoria
  • Increased aggressiveness
  • Increased sex drive

Some negative effects are:

Both Sexes:
  • Increased risk of mood disturbances including mania and depression
  • Increased risk of psychosis
  • Increased risk of aggressive acts which may injure self or others
  • Increased risk of cardiovascular disease
  • Increased risk of liver disease and cancer
  • Increased risk of kidney disease and cancer
  • Risk of HIV and Hepatitis B & C from contaminated needles
  • Acne
  • Bad breath
  • Decreased sex drive
  • Baldness
  • Water retention
  • Muscle cramps
  • Aching joints
  • Increased risk of muscle tears
  • Increased risk of tendon injuries
  • Increased risk of nose bleeds
  • Insomnia
  • Decrease in immune system effectiveness
  • Infertility
Men:
  • Increased risk of prostate enlargement and cancer
  • Decreased testicular size
  • Gynecomastia (growth of breasts)
Women:
  • Increased risk of cervical and endometrial cancer
  • Increased risk of osteoporosis
  • Irreversible enlargement of the clitoris
  • Irreversible hoarsening and deepening of the voice
  • Irreversible increase in facial and body hair
  • Decreased breast size
  • Amenorrhea
  • Uterine atrophy
Children:
  • Short Stature
  • Premature ephiphyseal closure